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🧩 Why “Just Try It” Is Bad AI Advice
Encouraging people to “just try AI” sounds empowering. It signals openness, curiosity, and speed. But in practice, this advice often creates confusion, anxiety, and uneven results. What feels like freedom to leaders frequently feels like exposure to everyone else. ------------- Context ------------- When AI enters an organization, the most common starting message is simple: experiment. Explore. Play. The intent is positive. Leaders want to avoid rigidity and spark discovery. They want momentum without bureaucracy. What follows, however, is rarely true experimentation. People try different tools in isolation. They duplicate effort. They encounter inconsistent results. Some get quick wins, others get burned. Most quietly disengage. The problem is not experimentation itself. The problem is unstructured experimentation in environments where outcomes still matter. When expectations are unclear and norms are undefined, “just try it” becomes a liability, not an invitation. AI adoption fails less often from resistance and more often from overload. ------------- Experimentation Without Structure Increases Cognitive Load ------------- Trying something new requires mental energy. When people are told to “just try AI,” they are implicitly asked to choose tools, invent use cases, judge output quality, manage risk, and decide what is acceptable to share. That is a lot to ask on top of existing workloads. Instead of curiosity, people feel pressure. Instead of play, they feel evaluation. They wonder if they are choosing the right tool, using it correctly, or wasting time. Every decision carries uncertainty. Cognitive load accumulates quietly. When it gets too high, people retreat to familiar workflows. Not because they dislike AI, but because they cannot afford the extra thinking. This is why adoption often clusters around a few enthusiasts. They absorb the load. Everyone else watches. ------------- Tool Sprawl Is the Enemy of Learning ------------- Unstructured experimentation almost always leads to tool sprawl.
🧩 Why “Just Try It” Is Bad AI Advice
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The Habit That Quietly Kills Momentum in Business
Most entrepreneurs aren’t stuck because they’re lazy or incapable. They’re stuck because they’re waiting. Quietly. Waiting for more clarity, better timing, more confidence, or for things to settle down. As long as you’re waiting, your potential and your business stays parked. Progress in business doesn’t come from more preparation. It comes from decisions. Every time you explain why you’re not moving yet, you hand control to something outside yourself: the market, the economy, your schedule, your past results. None of those are coming to build the business for you. The people who actually break through don’t feel ready. They move while uncertain. They don’t wait for perfect conditions... they adapt to the conditions they’re in. They don’t wait for permission, because no one is handing it out. Most people keep their effort conditional. “I’ll go all in when things calm down.” “I’ll commit once I feel more confident.” “I’ll start after this next thing.” And months (sometimes years) pass. Not because the idea wasn’t good, but because the conditions were never removed. So here’s something actionable for the week ahead: Pick one decision you’ve been delaying because you wanted more clarity. Make it by the end of the week...imperfectly. Then take the first uncomfortable action that follows from that decision. No optimizing. No overthinking. Just movement. Clarity shows up after action, not before it. Drop in the comments: What’s the one decision you’re done waiting on this week?
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Claude is Officially Better Than ChatGPT & More AI News You Can Use
In this video, I break down the week's happenings in AI including Clawdbot (Moltbot), a ton of new upgrades to the Claude ecosystem, new techniques and workflows people are using to create short films with AI, and more. Enjoy!
Hi everyone
I’m using ChatGPT regularly across different areas — learning, thinking through ideas, writing, planning, and problem-solving — but I feel like I’m still interacting with it at a surface level. I’m realizing that the quality of the output depends heavily on how well I direct the AI, not just what I ask. My question is:How do you personally “think about” and structure your prompts when using ChatGPT so it becomes a consistent thinking partner — not just a tool that gives generic answers? Are there any mental models, prompt structures, or habits you’ve developed that significantly improved the usefulness and depth of ChatGPT across everything you do? I’d love to learn how others are approaching this more intentionally. Thanks in advance!
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Sharing prompts to create viral shorts
Enjoy. Inspired from a short that got around 10 millions views (channel with only 22k subscribers, not my channel) Variation 1 — Image Prompt Vertical 9:16.A stylized doll-like animated girl in a cozy indoor room.She dances energetically, smiling and showing her pink palms to camera.Soft warm lighting, clean modern , no logo. Animation Prompt 6–7 seconds.Static camera.Girl dances playfully and shows her palms.Sudden jump-cut transformation where she appears wearing a pink hooded coat matching her hands. Audio Prompt Music-driven audio.Lively upbeat dance music.Soft whoosh on outfit change. Audio Keywords dance, upbeat, transformation, cute Direct Video Prompt Generate a vertical 9:16 video, 7 seconds. A doll-like animated girl dances happily in a cozy room, showing her pink palms. Suddenly she jump-cuts into a pink hooded coat matching her hands. Lively dance music with a soft transformation whoosh. No watermark, no logo. Variation 2 — Image Prompt Vertical 9:16.Same doll-like character.Closer framing on hands and face.Bright indoor lighting . no logo. Animation Prompt 5–6 seconds.Slow rhythmic movement.Hands raised toward camera.Quick outfit switch into pink hooded coat. Audio Prompt Music + SFX.Upbeat pop loop.Snap-change sound. Audio Keywords pop dance, outfit switch, cute Direct Video Prompt Generate a vertical 9:16 video, 6 seconds. Close framing of a doll-like girl dancing and showing pink palms. A quick snap transition changes her outfit into a pink hooded coat. Upbeat pop music with snap SFX. No watermark, no logo.
Sharing prompts to create viral shorts
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